pffft, english. who needs that? i'm never going to england

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"Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England. "

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Choose a play in which a central character behaves in an obsessive manner. This is not the question. This is the pointer! So you must think, which characters are obsessive and how. Then- answer the question. Abigail Williams is an obsessive character in “The Crucible”. Her obsessive actions and her controlling and manipulative relationships with other characters illustrate the simmering tensions in the society. Through her development as an obsessive character, other themes are revealed and explored, such as Proctor’s triumph over his inner conflict, Proctor and Elizabeth’s love, and the hypocrisy of the society. This central character’s obsession is integral to the plot of “The Crucible”, for it is the starting point for the chain of events which ultimately lead to the death of the heroic John Proctor, and Abigail herself fleeing Salem in disgrace.

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Page 1: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England

"Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England."

Page 2: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England

Choose a play in which a central character behaves in an

obsessive manner.

Describe the nature of the character’s obsessive behaviour

and discuss the influence this has on your understanding of the

character as a whole.

Page 3: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England

• Choose a play in which a central character behaves in an obsessive manner.

• This is not the question. This is the pointer!

• So you must think, which characters are obsessive and how.Then- answer the question.

• Abigail Williams is an obsessive character in “The Crucible”. Her obsessive actions and her controlling and manipulative relationships with other characters illustrate the simmering tensions in the society. Through her development as an obsessive character, other themes are revealed and explored, such as Proctor’s triumph over his inner conflict, Proctor and Elizabeth’s love, and the hypocrisy of the society. This central character’s obsession is integral to the plot of “The Crucible”, for it is the starting point for the chain of events which ultimately lead to the death of the heroic John Proctor, and Abigail herself fleeing Salem in disgrace.

Page 4: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England

• Then, you must continue to flesh out this answer.

• Describe the nature of the character’s obsessive behaviour and discuss the influence this has on your understanding of the character as a whole.

• Clearly show the marker how her obsessive nature is shown.– Through her actions- inciting the dancing, conjuring the spirits,

with the main goal of getting Proctor back for good. Eliminating Elizabeth. Her flirting with John, her behaviour in the trial.

– Through her relationships with other characters - John, Mary Warren, Elizabeth. These reveal aspects of her personality.

• What are her character traits. – Manipulative, devious, deceitful, controlling.

• What is her role as a character.– To facilitate the “Crucible”- the melting pot of tensions in the

society.• How do her character traits reveal other themes.

• Help John to become the hero to overcome his inner conflict, allow Elizabeth and John’s love to triumph, to show the hypocrisy of the puritan society.

Page 5: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England

Tips• For each of these points, you find quotations

which back up your idea, your answer!• NEVER say “In this essay I intend to answer

why …blah blah blah…”. It sounds immature.• Don’t read the pointer and forget to answer

the question.• Try to incorporate your quotations into your

sentences. • If you choose to quote a large chunk -

– “indent it” on a separate line. It makes it easier to read.

Page 6: Pffft, English. Who needs that? I'm never going to England